All of Chaeremon's works are lost, though a number of fragments are quoted by later authors. Three titles are preserved: the
History of Egypt,
Hieroglyphika, and
On Comets, with another fragment quoted from an unknown grammatical treatise of his.
Josephus quotes an extensive fragment from Chaeremon's Egyptian history, in which he scornfully recounts and ridicules, in a manner similar to that of
Manetho,
the departure of the Jews from Egypt. Josephus boasts of having refuted Chaeremon as well as Manetho and others. Chaeremon's history is also mentioned by Porphyry. Chaeremon's description of Egypt recalls the ideas which Philo, Clement, Origen, and others introduced into the Old and the New Testament. The asceticism especially, which he ascribes to the ancient Egyptian priests, is analogous to the description in
Philo's work, "De Vita Contemplativa"; still there is no literary connection between the two authors. Fragments of the "History of Egypt" may still exist in a treatise of
Psellus published in 1877. According to the
Suda, another work of Chaeremon was entitled "Hieroglyphica," and probably contained interpretations of the hieroglyphics while a third work may be the book "On the Comets" mentioned by Origen. Origen also made use of other writings of Chaeremon that are now lost. ==Notes==